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Archive for the ‘Art house fare’ Category

Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogen

“50 / 50” My rating: B+ (Opening wide Sept. 30)

99 minutes | MPAA rating: R

It’s one thing to make a raunchy comedy.

It’s another to tell a serious story about someone coping with a life-threatening disease.

But in a category all by itself is the ability to put those two seemingly contradictory genres together so that they complement each other rather than cancelling each other.

That’s the small miracle of “50/50,” based on screenwriter Will Reiser’s own bout with cancer.

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Gilles Lellouche

“POINT BLANK” My rating: B- (Opens Sept. 30 at the Tivoli)

84 minutes | No MPAA rating

The French actioner “Point Blank” (no relation to the old Lee Marvin flick) is a good example of hit-the-ground-running moviemaking.

It begins with a breathless chase through Paris and rarely eases the pressure over 84 minutes.

Our hero is Samuel (Gilles Lellouche), a nurse’s aide expecting his first child with his wife Nadia (Elena Anaya).

But all that domestic bliss is put at risk when an unconscious and unidentified patient is assigned to Samuel’s ward.

Samuel foils an attempt on the man’s life, and before you can say “Hitchcock” his beloved Nadia has been kidnapped. A threatening voice on the telephone tells Samuel that if he ever wants to see his unborn child he’d better spirit his patient out of the hospital and into the hands of…well, who knows who?

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Stefan Kupfer (right) gets under the hood

“PIANOMANIA” My rating: B (Opens Sept. 30 at the Tivoli)

93 minutes | No MPAA rating

Calling Stefan Kupfer a piano tuner is like calling Dale Ernhardt a motorist.

It’s accurate as far as it goes, but it doesn’t go nearly far enough.

Over the course of a year the documentary “Pianomania” follows Kupfer, a Steinway technician, as he goes about his business of tinkering with pianos at Vienna’s historic Konzerthaus.

It’s not tinkering for tinkering’s sake. His clients are keyboard heavy hitters like Lang Lang, Alfred Brendel and especially the demanding Pierre-Laurent Aimard — musicians who know precisely what they want from their instruments and expect Kupfer to deliver.

Here’s another auto racing metaphor: Kupfer is like a one-man pit crew. He gets under the hood. He tightens a string here and loosens a screw there. He’ll pull an engine and replace it, so to speak.

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Everything you’ve heard about the new Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts is true.

The building is stunningly beautiful, inside and out.

And based on my experience Saturday at the symphony’s concert with pianist Emanuel Ax, the acoustics in the 2,000-seat Helzberg Hall are nothing short of extraordinary.

From our vantage point, in the Lower Grand Tier (essentially the lower balcony overlooking the orchestra seats) the sound was magnificent.

Being accustomed to the muddied blob of noise heard when the orchestra performed in its old home, the Lyric Theater (a former movie house), I hadn’t anticipated how bright the music would sound in the symphony’s new home.

I mean, we’d all been told this was a state-of-the-art facility, but even so. To my amazement, it was possible to pick out and isolate the sounds of individual instruments.

The pling of a triangle, the sensuous run of a harp, the deep, throaty call of a bassoon stood out in gorgeous relief against the overall sound of the orchestra.

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Josiane Balasko as "The Hedgehog"

“THE HEDGEHOG” My rating: A- (Opening Sept. 23 at the Tivoli)

100 minutes | No MPAA rating

Paloma (Gerance Le Guillermic) lives in a big apartment in Paris with her wealthy family. Dad is a mucky-muck in the government. Mom is a neurotic beauty who talks to her houseplants. Her big sister is a spoiled college girl.

As Paloma tells us early on (talking directly into the video camera she lugs everywhere), she has no intention of inheriting her clan’s life of emotionally vacant dissipation.

And so she’s decided that in six months, on her 12th birthday, she’s going to commit suicide. In the meantime she’s making a video to leave behind as her legacy…and as an explanation.

Early on in “The Hedgehog,” Mona Anache’s first feature, I feared the worst.

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So many KIFF titles.

So little time.

Yes, blogheads, I’ve only recently completed my annual ritual of watching all (well, most of) the movies screening at this year’s Kansas International Film Festival scheduled for Sept. 29-Oct. 6 at the Glenwood Arts Theatre in Overland Park. And, as we’ve come to expect from KIFF, it’s an impressive lineup. (For a complete schedule and synopses of the fest titles, visit www.kansasfilm.com).

There are several ambitious and effective social issue documentaries: “Another Planet” (child labor), “Deforce” (racism and political repression in Detroit), “Genocide Revealed” (Stalin’s “ethnic cleansing” of the Ukraine), “Left by the Ship” (the abandoned Philippine offspring of American military personnel), “Project Happiness” (American teens travel the globe to understand the sources of contentment), “The Phantom Wolves of Sun Valley” (the war over reintroducing wolves to the American West).

There’s a trio of very well-produced films about the Nazi era: “Haberman,” “ Berlin 36” and “A Hitler.”

And there’s a handful of Hollywood movies making their regional debut at KIFF: The psychological thriller “Take Shelter” with Michael Shannon and the ubiquitous Jessica Chastain; “We Need to Talk About Kevin,” with Tilda Swinton as the mother of a boy involved in a high school killing spree; “Like Crazy,” a Sundance hit about a British student (Felicity Jones) separated from her American lover (Anton Yelchin) when her visa runs out.

Generally speaking, KIFF documentaries tend to impress me more than the narratives. This is no surprise. One person can make a pretty great documentary.

A “story”   film, on the other hand, is an incredibly complicated venture that requires the participation of dozens of people. There’s so much more that can go wrong. This is why my list of 10 Gotta-See KIFF films is so heavy on nonfiction titles. So here’s my list of the movies you should make an effort to catch:

“ISRAEL vs. ISRAEL” (3:45 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 2):  A GREAT documentary guaranteed to start fistfights in the lobby.

Terje Carlsson turns his camera on several Israeli peace activists (one of them a former Israeli soldier, another a grandmother) working to stem what they view as their own country’s illegal annexation of the West Bank and the eviction/subjugation of its Arab inhabitants.

These individuals — all Jews — are regarded as traitors by many of their countrymen.

What they’re up against is shown in several key confrontations between right-wing Jewish settlers and their Arab neighbors. Carlsson’s cameras film these incidents from the Jewish side of the battle lines, perhaps giving the settlers the impression that the filmmakers shared their agenda. As a result the cameras captured several cringeworthy displays of racial hatred and religious arrogance. (more…)

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One of the long-standing traditions of the Kansas International Film Festival continues this year with a live appearance by Boston’s Alloy Orchestra, a three-man ensemble (Terry Donahue, Roger Miller, Ken Winokur) specializing in original scores for silent films.

"Dream of a Rarebit Fiend" (1906)

This year’s Alloy offering (scheduled for 7:45 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 2) features the boys’ new project,  “Wild and Weird,” a collection of classic silent shorts.

The 10 films on the program include such noteworthy titles as “Dream of a Rarebit Fiend” (1906),  “Red Spectre” (1907), “The Acrobatic Fly” (1908), “Princess Nicotine, or the Smoke Fairy” (1909), “Artheme Swallows His Clarinet” (1912) and “The Life and Death of 9413, A Hollywood Extra” (1927).

These titles come from the U.S., France, Great Britain, Switzerland and Russia and lean toward the fanciful and surreal.

Interspersed with the films is a collection of vintage slides used during the silent era to advise and admonish audiences, promote coming attractions and advertise local merchants.

| Robert W. Butler

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Charlotte Gainsbourg in "The Tree"

“THE TREE”  My rating: B  (Opens Sept. 16 at the Tivoli)

minutes | MPAA rating: 

The Australian drama “The Tree,” writer/director Julie Bertucelli’s tale of a rural family slowly healing in the wake of a death features some knockout acting (especially from several child performers),  lovely cinematography and production design and a lingering mood of loss and spiritual yearning that’s hard to shake.

The O’Neill family is sent reeling when its husband/father Peter dies of a heart attack, leaving behind his wife Dawn (Charlotte Gainsbourg) and four children ranging in age from four to 16.

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“HAPPY” My rating: B- (Opens Sept. 16 at the Tivoli)

75 minutes | No MPAA rating  

Early in the documentary “Happy” we get a quote from Benjamin Franklin to the effect that while the Declaration of Independence guarantees our right to pursue happiness, actually catching happiness is up to us.

Roko Belic’s film examines human happiness, where it comes from, how people have gained and preserved it, the circumstances under which it seems to flourish.

Belic interviews scientists and psychologists and religious leaders who have specialized in the study of happiness, and their comments about the emotion’s source (nature vs. nurture, dopamine levels, etc.) are enlightening.

Far more effective though, are the man-in-the-street examples Belic has found all over the world, from a sixty-something South American surfer to Okinawan villagers who lead blissful lives well into their 100s. (more…)

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A ghostly image from "Kuroneko"

“KURONEKO (BLACK CAT IN THE GROVE)”   (Opening Sept. 9 at the Tivoli)

minutes | No MPAA rating

Fans of classic Japanese cinema will have an atmospheric old time with “Kuroneko,” Kaneto Shindo’s 1968 feature based on a centuries-old old folk tale.

Set in a feudal period, this supernatural love story begins with the brutal rape and murder of a peasant woman (Nobuko Otawa)  and her daughter-in-law (Kiwako Taichi) by a roving band of samurai/bandits. Their hut is set ablaze; later a black cat laps the blood from the bodies. (more…)

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